On 08/04/11 09:21, Chris Hammond-Thrasher wrote:
> Richard,
>
> Are you saying that the only way to remove a preferred ssid from an iOS
> device is to setup an AP with that ssid, connect to it, and then thumb
> "forget network"? This is indeed a serious karma risk.
This is the only method I am aware

Two questions here, first, whats the best way to find out the maximum
transmit power of any given card? I assumed it would be on the FCC
site but for one of my Alfa cards, a awus036eh, last time I searched
their database I managed to find a card with the same id but the photo
and spec was completely

On 1 August 2011 21:47, Steve Armstrong
<SteveArmstrong (at) logicallysecure (dot) com [email concealed]> wrote:
> Robin,
>
> Yea, we reported it to apple a while back - we called it a "Apple mobile device IOS 'Hidden Preferred Network List' Vulnerability."
>
> I was surprised they responded so quickly (less than 24 hours), but

I've been playing with some wifi stuff and, blame Vivek, I've been
using my iPhone as a victim. At some point I manually added a new
ESSID called fred. Since I did that whenever I turn wifi on on the
phone it probes for fred but I can't find anywhere in the iPhone setup
where I can edit or delete fr

To go with episode 26 of the Wifi Mega Primer on Security Tube I've
just released a new tool called Wifi Honey which automates setting up
a set of APs to try to work out what encryption a client expects an AP
it is probing for to support.

I'm using Virtual Box in OS X and with two wifi cards when I plug them
in and tell Virtual Box to let the VM use them it says that the device
is in use by someone else. How can I find out what is using the device
so that I can release it and let the VM have it?

I want to setup a fake access point which uses my fake radius server
running Freeradius-wpe. Would airbase-ng work for this? My first
reaction is no, as it has no configuration option for a Radius server
to communicate with.